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Posted

It’s no secret that Minnesota has been successful on the offensive side of the ball this season. Some of this success can be attributed to Minnesota’s core players taking the next step, while other veteran additions have certainly aided the cause. Teams need to be successful in a variety of situations, but one area that separates the Twins from the rest of baseball is when opposing pitchers try to sneak a fastball by.Isn’t Every Team Good Against Fastballs?

Minnesota is head and shoulders above the crowd when it comes to fastballs and looking at pitch type linear weights in relation to that pitch (wFB). According to FanGraphs, this linear weight “attempts to answer the question, ‘How well has a batter/pitcher performed against/using a certain pitch?’” Over the course of a season, this allows us to see which pitch a hitter performed best against.

 

As a team, the Twins have the highest wFB in all of baseball and it isn’t even close. The Dodgers and the Yankees are in a close battle for second place but Minnesota’s 100.6 wFB is almost 30 points higher. Since Target Field opened in 2010, the Twins wFB is the tenth highest compiled by a club and there are still 30+ games to add to their total.

 

When looking at the players responsible for Minnesota’s wFB production, there are some of the usual suspects. Nelson Cruz (23.7 wFB), Mitch Garver (16.4), Max Kepler (13.9), and Miguel Sano (13.1) all sit at the top of the team’s leaderboard. Jason Castro and Jorge Polanco are tied for fifth with 9.4 wFB. One surprise might be Luis Arraez and his 7.1 wFB since he has under 250 plate appearances at the big-league level.

 

Facing Big Time Heat

Minnesota also isn’t just getting away with hitting mediocre fastballs from subpar teams in the American League, because they have some of the best numbers among clubs when facing 97+ mph this year. The Twins have the best batting average, slugging percentage, and AB per XBH.

Make sure not to pass on the message but opposing pitchers and coaching staffs must not have caught on to Minnesota’s fastball tendencies. Through this weekend’s games, the Twins have seen fastballs in 26.4% of their at-bats while the MLB average is 22.0%. Mitch Garver (34.2 FB%), Miguel Sano (32.6%), Jason Castro (31.1%), Eddie Rosario (30.4%) and Max Kepler (30.1%) are all seeing fastballs at least a third of the time. The Twins also have five other regular players with a FB% above the league average.

 

In the Zone

Since Minnesota continues to see fastballs, it’s important that players don’t go out of the zone to chase pitches. The Twins have the fourth best Z-Swing% in all of baseball which takes the swings a team has inside the zone and divides it by pitches inside the zone. Besides swinging at pitches in the zone, Minnesota is also making a high rate of contact on those same pitches. So far this year, the Twins rank eighth in Z-Contact% with only a couple playoff-caliber teams ranked higher than them.

 

Statcast also gives a glimpse into how successful Twins batters have been at making consistent contact. Among players with at least 100 batted ball events, Minnesota has four players in the top-8 for barrels per plate appearance percentage (Brls/PA %). Nelson Cruz leads all of baseball with a 13.8 Brls/PA % and Jason Castro also sits in the top-5 (11.2%). Castro entered play on Monday higher on the leaderboard than Mike Trout. Miguel Sano and CJ Cron round out the top-8.

 

Many of the hitters mentioned above are having their best professional season and credit needs to be given to the coaching staff. Keeping James Rowson as hitting coach has certainly been one of Minnesota’s most important off-season moves. However, a hitting coach can only do so much.

 

To be successful in October, Minnesota’s offense is going to have to pick up some of the slack from the pitching staff. If opposing pitchers continue to relay on their fastball, Twins’ hitters are going to make them pay.

 

Why do you think the Twins are so successful against the fastball? Leave a COMMENT and start the discussion.

 

Click here to view the article

Posted

“Make sure not to pass on the message but opposing pitchers and coaching staffs must not have caught on to Minnesota’s fastball tendencies. Through this weekend’s games, the Twins have seen fastballs in 26.4% of their at-bats while the MLB average is 22.0%. Mitch Garver (34.2 FB%), Miguel Sano (32.6%), Jason Castro (31.1%), Eddie Rosario (30.4%) and Max Kepler (30.1%) are all seeing fastballs at least a third of the time. The Twins also have five other regular players with a FB% above the league average.”

 

No. You are quoting batted ball statistics, not pitches faced. The Twins have a 26.4% FLY BALL rate...vs league average of 22%.

Posted

This exchange was right after Texas clinched the 2011 ALCS in Game 6.

 

FOX Interviewer: Ron Washington, aren't you happy you didn't have to pitch to Nelson Cruz this series?

 

Washington: I was very happy. But if I did, I probably would have thrown him breaking balls!

 

 

Be warned, you will have to forward to the 3 hour, 55 minute mark to get the quote :)

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QFj7t2IXx9M

 

 

Posted

 

Is it just me, or is the baseball in the picture above actually getting dented in? That seems to accurately represent Twins hitters this year!

Could be the bat that is getting dented in.   Either way, it certainly looks squared up by Arraez.   What a great picture.

Posted

Is it just me, or is the baseball in the picture above actually getting dented in?

Also, it's a hanging curve, not a fastball, despite the title to the article. Notice the location of the stitches on the baseball.

 

 

/ i keed, I keed... I'm no Parker Hageman... :)

Posted

“Make sure not to pass on the message but opposing pitchers and coaching staffs must not have caught on to Minnesota’s fastball tendencies. Through this weekend’s games, the Twins have seen fastballs in 26.4% of their at-bats while the MLB average is 22.0%. Mitch Garver (34.2 FB%), Miguel Sano (32.6%), Jason Castro (31.1%), Eddie Rosario (30.4%) and Max Kepler (30.1%) are all seeing fastballs at least a third of the time. The Twins also have five other regular players with a FB% above the league average.”No. You are quoting batted ball statistics, not pitches faced. The Twins have a 26.4% FLY BALL rate...vs league average of 22%.

Correct.

 

Per Fangraphs, the Twins actually have the lowest percentage of fastballs seen in 2019:

 

https://www.fangraphs.com/leaders.aspx?pos=all&stats=bat&lg=all&qual=0&type=4&season=2019&month=0&season1=2019&ind=0&team=0,ts&rost=0&age=0&filter=&players=0&startdate=2019-01-01&enddate=2019-12-31&sort=2,d

Posted

 

Which matches the eye test, and makes sense. Lineups that hit a lot of singles get lots of fastballs, since a hit often isn't any (or much) worse than a walk. That's not the Twins. Lineups like the Twins, that hit a ton of home runs get lots of breaking balls...and fastballs on the edge or outside the zone. Twins power hitters...especially since Sano seems to have made his adjustments...aren't getting challenged with fastballs in the zone frequently, at least by the 80%+ of pitchers that don't have extraordinary fastballs. It's amazing how many 2-1 and 3-1 pitches the Twins get that are still not fastballs.

Posted

 

I hope the rest of league is not reading Twins Daily!

It appears the White Sox did. Hanging curveballs to Schoop aren't any better.

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